Food quality: research on flavour, colour and texture of food, quality attributes influenced by processing and storage, preservation techniques, controlled or modified atmosphere storage and packaging, development of novel and functional food, novel aspects of food analysis and food control, research on degradative and preservative reactions, postharvest physiology of plants and analytical procedures.

Applied microbiology: food fermentation, enzyme production from microorganisms, aplication of enzymes and microorganisms in food processing and preservation, oenology, microbial growth/inactivation, research on foodborne pathogens, probiotics and prebiotics.

Applied cell biology: novel studies on physical and functional characterization of genomes, of technologically important organisms, expression of genomic information, development and application of technologies for the detection of single molecules and molecular interactions, identification of biotechnologically interesting new compounds, molecular bioinformatics and development of automated systems for biotechnological purposes.

Physiology and biochemistry: biochemical and physiological studies of metabolisms and enzymes including intermediary metabolism of industrial microorganisms, tissue culture and cell-free systems; bioregulatory investigations at the molecular level including transcription/translation control and growth/product synthesis relationships; design and engineering of products by molecular strategies, protein/enzyme engineering and modification; protein and metabolite secretion; molecular strategies for screening of new or modified products (e.g. pharmaceuticals, bioactive compounds, enzymes); product development based on enforced evolution and combinatorial strategies.

Food Technology and Biotechnology publishes the following categories of papers:

Original scientific papers report unpublished results of original research. They must contain significant and original observations to be critically evaluated. Experimental data should be presented in a way that enables reproduction and verification of analyses and deductions on which the conclusions are based.

Preliminary communications include short information on the results of scientific research which require immediate publication.

Scientific notes include reports on shorter but completed research and should be concise.

Reviews are original, critical and up-to-date surveys of an area in which, preferably, the author himself/herself is active. They should include recent references from international publications.

Minireviews are papers reviewing narrower topics of particular scientific interest. They should give up-to-date state of the art of the topic they cover.

Papers previously reported at a congress or symposium will be published only if they have not previously been published in proceedings. However, these papers are subject to regular editorial procedure, i.e. evaluation by referees and revision.

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